I bit on this collection last night and while I'm still bummed that the unrated cut of "Live Free or Die Hard" isn't included on this box set, it was just bothering me not having these flicks in my Blu-ray collection. I'm sure I'll regret it when another box set down the road is released with the unrated cut included

The way I see it, if you haven't bought this in the five years since it came out, you may as well wait another few months until you can get a five pack with A Good Day To Die Hard. Otherwise, your collection would look odd anyway, having four in a box set and one seperate. Either all seperate (an expensive choice!) or all together looks nicer in my opinion.

And they might even upgrade the other 4 for this new boxset.

However, I could be completely wrong and no new boxset and no remasters are in the works at all.

The PG-13 cut of LFODH is superior to the unrated cut. The unrated cut adds some questionable CGI blood and takes away some of the best lines just to add a few f**k's in the movie.

Yeah I usually avoid "unrated" editions.
Sometimes it's an actual directors cut... But most if the time it's just adding a bunch of unecessary stuff to the film.

LFODH is a great example.
They ended up taking some of the best parts out and the action scenes are pretty much designed to be PG13 so the cgi blood is more distracting than anything else. Also the one f-bomb isn't enough. The censorship in the regular cut is sort of(not really) clever whereas adding it back in is just profanity for the sake of profanity(and this is coming from someone who loves Pulp Fiction and In Bruges)

It's "watered down" because it sells more tickets, plain and simple. With production costs at an all-time high, studios have to make their money back. That's just the way it is. I love Die Hard as much as the next guy, but to say it needs swearing to make it feel right is nonsense to me. Foul language doesn't add anything to the movie, doesn't change the plot or the characters... And remember, the unrated cut isn't the original cut... it has ADR that doesn't match the lips because they went back and added swearing later. It wasn't meant to be there in the first place, in some instances, and wasn't even shot that way.

The swearing and the blood make it feel 'right' because it coincides with the 'feel' of the first three movies. Mclain's swearing I think helps convey his cocky and confident 'f' it!' attitude. That ADR drives me nuts too--don't get me wrong. As you said, Retablo, it wasn't meant to be there in the first place--and you're right. That's my problem with part 4.

Kevin Holly nailed it: The fact is, the "unrated" cut is not what the fans wanted in the first place

Kryptonic has it right too whereas they tried too hard to add things back in to please the fans.

I'm partial to the unrated cut only because that's the closest I'll get to how that movie 'should' have been. You give long-time fans 3 movies with graphic violence, a lot of blood, and a lot of swearing, and then 'water-down' the fourth movie in the series to accommodate a broader audience... it's going to piss some people off.

That said, I greatly enjoyed LFODH; it worked in its own right and yes the theatrical flowed better than the unrated. BUT, the unrated (had it been done right) is how it should have been in the first place. The market for 'that' movie already existed and I'm confident it would have done just fine with an R rating.

So we know that a new commentary track has been recorded for a Die Hard 25th Anniversary disc. Now we have the pictures of the sets, courtesy of japan. Everyone is getting them in January. No word on a US release. Comes with a ticket to the new movie.
Bonus disc comes with the boxed set. It says (translated): With Special Disc comes only now public memorial Roadshow "Die Hard / Last Day" expanding nationwide one other play date "Die Hard / Last Day" published winter 2013, over 1 hour in ● "Die Hard 4.0" inclusion benefits recorded a new video more than two hours a discount coupon

So we know that a new commentary track has been recorded for a Die Hard 25th Anniversary disc. Now we have the pictures of the sets, courtesy of japan. Everyone is getting them in January. No word on a US release. Comes with a ticket to the new movie.
Bonus disc comes with the boxed set. It says (translated): With Special Disc comes only now public memorial Roadshow "Die Hard / Last Day" expanding nationwide one other play date "Die Hard / Last Day" published winter 2013, over 1 hour in ● "Die Hard 4.0" inclusion benefits recorded a new video more than two hours a discount coupon

I hope that means the U.S. will be getting a new box set of all the movies remastered as well.

[QUOTE=Red Pill 101;6784737]The swearing and the blood make it feel 'right' because it coincides with the 'feel' of the first three movies. Mclain's swearing I think helps convey his cocky and confident 'f' it!' attitude. That ADR drives me nuts too--don't get me wrong. As you said, Retablo, it wasn't meant to be there in the first place--and you're right. That's my problem with part 4. /QUOTE]

Actions speak louder than words. If McClane is ONLY cocky and confident when he's spouting F Bombs, then he's completely failed as a character.

Luckily, that just isn't the case. Besides, it's not like the first 3 films were riddled with expletives in the first place.

Michael Kamen is back with a vengeance at La-La Land Records with this spectacular 2 cd set brought to you courtesy of Sony Music and 20th Century Fox . Literally years in the making, this explosive set features over 2 hours of music written and recorded for the third film in the Die Hard franchise. The soundtrack that was released back in 1995 only contained only a fair amount of score, songs and some classical cues that were not ever featured in the final film. This newly expanded release gives the fans what they have been clamoring for…and then some. Not only are we releasing the score as written for the film, but also several rejected tracks never heard until now. If you are fan of high octane, action packed scoring this is a must have release!

It will go on sale Tuesday, December 4th at 4:00 PM EST / 1:00 PM PST. LLL released a similar set for Die Hard in late 2011, and it sold out its 3500 copies in just a few days, so expect this one to go quick!

I'm desperately seeking a high-quality screenshot of the "NOW I HAVE A MACHINE GUN HO-HO-HO" scene (specifically, the shot of the sweater with the text). Can anybody help a fellow forumer out? Thanks in advance!

The swearing and the blood make it feel 'right' because it coincides with the 'feel' of the first three movies. Mclain's swearing I think helps convey his cocky and confident 'f' it!' attitude. That ADR drives me nuts too--don't get me wrong. As you said, Retablo, it wasn't meant to be there in the first place--and you're right. That's my problem with part 4.

Actions speak louder than words. If McClane is ONLY cocky and confident when he's spouting F Bombs, then he's completely failed as a character.

Luckily, that just isn't the case. Besides, it's not like the first 3 films were riddled with expletives in the first place.

Have you seen those films lately? I think you'd be surprised. Die Hard has about 60 "f*cks" or about 1 every 2 minutes. Die Hard 2 has about 70 "f*cks" in it's 2 hour 4 minute runtime. Die Hard with a Vengeance has about 105 "f*cks" or almost 1 every minute (255 total examples of profanity throughout). While I agree that action speaks louder than words, one of the most important parts of a character is his voice. Live Free of Die Hard (while being FAR better than it had any right to be) completely misses McClane's voice. The way someone talks is just as important as how they act in building who they are. But let's be honest, LFODH didn't capture McClane's physical embodiment either. It was 2 hours of grouchy Bruce Willis without any of the spark or attitude that he had in the first three movies. There's two moments in the newest trailer (the moment where he smirks and the "007 of Plainview New Jersey" line) where it actually feels more like John McClane than LFODH contained in its entirety.

Also, this needs to be clarified... Live Free or Die Hard is not a finished film in either version. It was begun as an R-rated Die Film and it was decided by the studio to switch to PG-13 mid-way through shooting. This isn't opinion or myth. I know people connected to production who confirmed it while they were still shooting. If you look at the PG-13 cut, a lot of it is edited in wide shoots to cover some pretty bad ADR where they REMOVED the various originally written and recorded "f*cks." When the unrated cut was done, they were able to restore much of this original dialog, but had to poorly ADR the unrated dialog back in over the "cleaned" footage from the second half of production. What people were ultimately given was in incomplete film in both versions.